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CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

CHEMTRAILS%20-%20CONFIRMED%20-%202010%20by%20William%20Thomas

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In Austin, Texas, where Richard Young reported local skies “filled almost daily with trails crossing each<br />

other," a school nurse told a worried parent that she had seen over 100 sick children in a single day.<br />

On January 31, Lake Havasu’s Today’s News Herald reported: “Victims Curse Unnamed Bug, But Can’t<br />

Call It The “Flu’”.<br />

A local family physician “said Friday that a nameless virus is bringing at least 10 patients a day into her<br />

office and driving some into the hospital, but laboratory tests show only a few are suffering from Type A<br />

or other identifiable strains of influenza.”<br />

After cobweb-like filaments fell in Santa Cruz, one resident collected some, only to see the strange<br />

strands disintegrate in a jar.<br />

“Hospitals full here in Santa Cruz, and also in Salinas,” she reported.<br />

A HAM radio operator in contact with a Richmond resident learned that “a lot of planes flew very low<br />

over his home one night which was very unusual and very quickly he and his wife got very ill. When they<br />

went to the hospital they “couldn’t get in ‘because it was filled up with people. The MD he saw there<br />

hadn’t seen anything like it and was rather upset.”<br />

In Castle Rock, Colorado: “The emergency room was filled with people and the prescription line was out<br />

the front door; all the cold medicine was on a table in the lobby instead of behind the counter. The<br />

woman doctor who was new to the USA told my wife, ‘You don’t have to say anything, everyone here<br />

has the same thing.’ And she told my wife it was a new bacteria that they can’t fight. She said ‘your<br />

sickness will last for up to three months.’”<br />

Also in Colorado, following a day of heavy spraying: “Right now, the news is showing that hospitals in<br />

our area are turning away patients with flu, asthma, etc. Greeley, Fort Collins hospital is 95% full.<br />

Operations are being postponed for lack of beds.”<br />

The News and Observer in Raleigh, North Carolina reported that respiratory admissions to Durham<br />

regional hospital jumped from the usual 184 patients a day to 247. Ambulance drivers were told that the<br />

hospital was not receiving any more patients.<br />

In Canada, an epidemic of influenza-like illnesses had broken out in Vancouver and Victoria, British<br />

Columbia, as well as Edmonton, Toronto and other cities across the country. This was not the flu. In<br />

Peterborough, Ontario a single hospital emergency room took in 307 acute care patients in one day.<br />

Great Britain was particularly hard hit by the mystery pandemic. After<br />

lingering contrails and cobweb-like fallout were reported and<br />

videotaped over London and Birmingham, the BBC reported that<br />

refrigerator trucks were being hired as temporary morgues after more<br />

than 8,000 people - " mostly elderly " - died from pneumonia and other<br />

respiratory complications in the last week of December 1998 and the<br />

first two weeks of January 1999. [BBC Jan 14/99]<br />

MDs reported:<br />

-- “This is the worst crisis I have seen.”<br />

-- “We have people double- and triple-parked in the ER on stretchers.”<br />

-- “Respiratory and gastrointestinal illnesses are filling up the beds.”<br />

-- “It was surprising to me how sick they got and how quickly it<br />

happened.”

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